| Literature DB >> 30524202 |
Marie Appelgren1,2, Christel Bahtsevani1, Karin Persson1, Gunilla Borglin1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research suggests that registered nurses (RNs) do not feel adequately prepared to support patients with intellectual disability disorder (IDD). This is unsurprising, as few European health sciences curricula include undergraduate and graduate training courses in IDD. As RNs are often in the front line of care, eliciting in-depth knowledge about how they experience nursing this group of patients is vital. Our aim in this study was to develop a conceptual understanding about RNs' experiences of nursing patients with IDD.Entities:
Keywords: Care; Idiomatic translations; Intellectual disability disorder; Line of argument synthesis; Qualitative research; Qualitative synthesis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30524202 PMCID: PMC6276187 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-018-0316-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Breakdown of the research question
| SPIDER heading | Search topics |
|---|---|
| S - sample | Nurses |
| PI – phenomenon of interest | Nursing for persons with intellectual disability disorders |
| D & R – design and research type | Qualitative research |
Fig. 1Flow chart literature search
Example of the synthesis process
| Study no./Reference | Translatable Concept (TC) | Sub-categories | Content supporting TC | Idiomatic translation | Line of Argument synthesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1. Donovan, 2012. [ |
| NA |
| Nursing people with IDD can mean having a long-term in-depth relation to be able to read and to understand the person | Based on long-term relationship |
| S26. Slevin & Sines, 2005. [ |
| NA |
| Nursing people with IDD can mean having an in-depth relation both with the patient and his/her relevant others in order to be able to provide a care that empower all included | Based on long-term relationship |
| S21. Ndengeyingoma & Ruel, 2006. [ |
| Challenges relating to organizing care delivery | Nursing people with IDD can mean having challenges in managing the patients´ behavior and in communication | Go beyond verbal communication alone | |
| S12. Morton-Nance & Schafer, 2012. [ |
| NA |
| Nursing people with IDD can mean challenges in regards to communication between patients, health care professionals and relevant others. Nursing people with IDD can mean challenges in regards to the skills and abilities of HCPs which leads to unmet needs and poor quality of care | Go beyond verbal communication alone |
a=LOA synthesis interpreted to represent a tentatively distinct conceptualization of nursing
Overview included studies
| Study | Study aim | Sample and context | Methodological approach | Data collection and analysis | 2nd Order Concepts | LOA synthesis | Quality appraisal (Toye et al., 2013) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blackmore, 2001, United Kingdom. | Explore learning disability nurses´ perceptions about their role in advocating for clients who have ID + physical, sensory and communication disabilities | Generic qualitative design | Semi-structured interviews Constant comparison | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | ||
| Boarder, 2002, United Kingdom. | Obtain an overview of Community Learning Disability Nurses´ perceptions of their work | Generic qualitative design | Semi-structured interviews Content analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | ||
| Campbell, 2011, United Kingdom. | Describe participants’ emotional response to violence and to explore what support they require in dealing with constant exposure to workplace violence. | Generic qualitative design | Semi-structured interviews, Thematic analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Satisfactory paper | ||
| Donovan, 2012, United Kingdom. | Describe the experiences of Learning Disability Nurses when they are with clients who may be in pain but who cannot communicate their feelings verbally. | N = 8 RNIDs Gender not known Care homes [NHS Trust] | Phenomenology | Unstructured interviews | Translatable 2nd order concepts n = 2 Non-translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | |
| Doody et al., 2012, Northern Ireland. | Explore the experiences of RNIDs caring for older people with ID. | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | ||
| Fitzgerald et al., 2013, Ireland. | Explore nurses´ perceptions of their role in the area of ID care | N = 7 RNs ♀ 7 Community residential service | Generic qualitative design | Semi-structured interviews Latent content analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | |
| Focht-New, 2012, USA. | Describe RNs experiences of teaching for people with IDD | Grounded theory | Interviews, focus group interviews, non-participant observations Constant comparison | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | ||
| Hellzen et al., 2004, Sweden. | Illuminate the meaning of being a nurse for an extremely provoking patient with ID | N = 8 Enrolled nurses ♀ 5 + ♂ 3 Group Dwelling | Phenomenology | Narrative interviews Constant comparison | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Satisfactory paper | |
| Lee & Kiemle, 2014, United Kingdom. | Gaining an in-depth understanding of the day-to-day experience of nurses working with people diagnosed with both PD and ID | N = 9 RNs ♀ 7 + ♂ 2 Medium-secure and low secure units | Interpretive phenomenology | Semi-structured interviews, Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Satisfactory paper | |
| Li & Ng, 2008, United Kingdom. | Explore nurses´ experiences in caring for dying patients with profound learning disabilities | Generic qualitative design | Open-ended semi-structured interviews Constant comparison | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | ||
| Marsham,2011, United Kingdom. | Explore the experiences of RNIDs communicating with adults with ID who use | N = 8 RNLDs ♀ 8 | Descriptive phenomenology | Semi-structured interviews Phenomenological analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | |
| Martin et al., 2012a, Ireland. | Explore the experiences of RNIDs communicating with adults with ID who use non-verbal communication | N = 8 RNLDs ♀ 8 Irish residential service for people with IDD | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interviews Phenomenological analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Satisfactory paper | |
| Martin et al., 2012b, Ireland. | Explore the experiences of RNIDs communicating with adults with ID who use non-verbal communication | N = 8 RNLDs ♀ 8 Irish residential service for people with IDD | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interviews Phenomenological analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed Paper | |
| Morton-Nance & Schafer, 2012, United Kingdom. | Explore the experiences of RNLD and district nurses caring for people with a ID at the end of their lives | N = 6, 3 RNs & 3 RNIDs ♀ 6 Two specialist health care settings | Descriptive phenomenology | Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Fatally flawed paper | |
| Ndengeyingoma & Ruel, 2016, Canada. | Explore nurses´ representations of caring for people with ID, intervention strategies they current use, and to identify needs to ensure quality care | Generic qualitative design | Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Satisfactory paper | ||
| Slevin & Sines, 2005, United Kingdom. | Investigate the roles of community nurse for people with ID when caring for clients, and their careers, when the client is a person who indulges in challenging behaviours | Grounded theory | In-depth face-to-face interviews Constant comparison | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Satisfactory paper | ||
| Sowney & Barr, 2006, Northern Ireland. | Explore the experiences of nurses working in accident and emergency departments in the assessment and provision of care to adults with ID | Generic qualitative design | Focus group interviews Thematic analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Key paper | ||
| Taua & Farrow, 2009, New Zealand. | Identify and describe current nursing practice within an inpatient ID service and to identify factors that influence current nursing practice within an inpatient ID service | N = 5 RNs Gender not known Inpatient ID service | Ethnography | Observations and semi-structured interviews Ethno semantic analysis | Translatable 2nd order concepts | Key paper |
a = LOA synthesis interpreted to represent a tentatively distinct conceptualization of nursing
Conceptual understanding of Nursing for patients with IDD
| LOA Synthesis | Nursing for People with IDD* | LOA Synthesis | Nursing Per Se |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Based on long-term relationships | B | Rests its foundation on trust |
| C | Go beyond verbal communication alone | D | Be forward planning |
| F | Work against negative attitudes and alienation | E | Include relevant others to offer quality care |
| G | Raise the bar in nursing for this patient group | H | Acknowledge the person behind the label of disability |
| J | Take unpredictable situations into account | I | Based on evidence-based practice |
| N | Understand the complexity of this patient group | K | Knowledge and skills beyond the diagnosis (here IDD) |
| L | Inter-professional collaboration | ||
| M | Entails advocacy and safe guarding |
* = LOA synthesis interpreted to represent a tentatively distinct conceptualization of nursing